The first patent is for Featurespace’s Automated Deep Behavioral Networks for the card and payments industry. Automated Deep Behavioral Networks are a deep neural network architecture of connections and updates that recognize and prevent significantly more fraud cases. Deep neural networks have revolutionized areas such as image recognition and text understanding by creating specific architectures (connections and weights) designed to extract meaning from the underlying data presented to the network.
Automated Deep Behavioral Networks solves the problem of finding a neural net architecture that extracts meaning from transaction sequences producing a much higher distinction between genuine and fraudulent transactions.
“Financial institutions around the world are experiencing fraud and account takeover at unprecedented levels, with some reports estimating this number at more than $40 billion last year,” said Dave Excell, founder of Featurespace. “The Automated Deep Behavioral Networks patent and associated technologies deliver the right levels of model performance the industry needs to decrease fraud and protect consumer accounts before attacks happen.”
Featurespace’s second patent is for Behavioral Anomaly Score, which identifies anomalies in individual customer behavior without having any prior knowledge of contextual high-risk behavior. This technology appreciably amplifies the ability to identify when a person’s behavior is out of character without any labelled data.
Through a Behavioral Anomaly Score, companies and financial institutions can see the exact point at which a person’s behavior has changed with greater precision and from there, construct more complex models for change detection; further reducing the incidences of financial crime.
“The fight against fraudsters and the organizations that commit financial crime on a large scale is challenging and ever-evolving,” Excell added. “Technology, specifically machine learning will continue to be central in this fight and these two patents from Featurespace advance our leading market position and our capacity to help progressive financial institutions protect the consumer.”
Identity fraud costs US citizens a total of around US$56 billion last year, with about 49 million consumers falling victim, according to a study by Javelin Strategy & Research. A UK Citizens Advice report states one in three adults in the UK were targeted by a pandemic-related scam last year.
Full public patent applications have been filed in the US, UK, EU and Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT).